Pregnancy Nclex questions
If exhibited by a pregnant woman, what represents a positive sign of pregnancy?
A. Morning sickness
B. Quickening
C. Positive pregnancy test
D. Fetal heartbeat auscultated with Doppler/ fetoscope ans: D. Fetal heartbeat auscultated with
Doppler/fetoscope
Morning sickness and quickening, along with amenorrhea and breast tenderness, are presumptive signs of
pregnancy; subjective findings are suggestive but not diagnostic of pregnancy. Other probable signs
include changes in integument, enlargement of the uterus, and Chadwick sign. A positive pregnancy test
is still considered to be a probable sign of pregnancy (objective findings are more suggestive but not yet
diagnostic of pregnancy) since error can occur in performing the test or in rare cases human chorionic
gonadotropin (hCG) may be detected in the urine of nonpregnant women. Chances of error are less likely
to occur today since pregnancy tests used are easy to perform and are very sensitive to the presence of the
hCG associated with pregnancy. Detection of a fetal heartbeat, palpation of fetal movements and parts by
an examiner, and detection of an embryo/fetus with sonographic examination would be positive signs
diagnostic of pregnancy.
Which hematocrit (Hct) and hemoglobin (Hgb) results represent(s) the lowest acceptable values for a
woman in the third trimester of pregnancy?
A. 38% Hct; 14 g/dL Hgb
B. 35% Hct; 13 g/dL Hgb
C. 33% Hct; 11 g/dL Hgb
D. 32% Hct; 10.5 g/dL Hgb ans: C. 33% Hct; 11 g/dL Hgb
This is within normal limits in the nonpregnant woman. This is within normal limits for a nonpregnant
woman. Represents the lowest acceptable value during the first and the third trimesters. This represents
the lowest acceptable value for the second trimester when the hemodilution effect of blood volume
expansion is at its peak.
When assessing the fetal heart rate (FHR) of a woman at 30 weeks of gestation, the nurse counts a rate of
82 beats/min. Initially the nurse should:
A. Recognize that the rate is within normal limits and record it.
B. Assess the woman's radial pulse.
C. Notify the physician.
D. Allow the woman to hear the heartbeat. ans: B. Assess the woman's radial pulse.
The expected FHR is 120 to 160 beats/min. The nurse may have inadvertently counted the uterine souffle,
the beatlike sound of blood flowing through the uterine blood vessels, which corresponds to the mother's